Quote:
Originally Posted by Yar-PocketBooker
These things happen sometimes... I recommend that you contact your seller and ask them to start a delivery investigation with the carrier (UPS or USPS, etc). If the parcel was insured, the seller gets their money back and then sends you a new devices or refunds the money.
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Thanks Yar-PocketBooker for your helpful info. I agree, I would have ended doing that, but thankfully, it turned up.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Metal Mick
Hi Judet,
the good news is, I have never had a parcel from overseas go astray, and I have bought quite a number. Registered or not, USPS, UPS, DHL, FedEx, and others. They've all arrived, safe and sound. Some took a while longer than others, but they all got to me.
Sometimes, I've received the item and it has still been shown as being in the country of origin.
(I could stop here, but...)
The bad news is, I once received a registered post item, slid into the packing strips of a larger parcel, sent from Sydney, bound for Townsville. I'm in Melbourne, and the parcel it was attached to was mailed locally. 
My guess is, that no more than a couple of days from now, yours will be delivered. To you. <smile>
Cheers,
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Thanks Metal Mick for your thoughts and sharing your experiences. I appreciated and needed to read them, it really helped me understand all may not be lost
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dulin's Books
how many days has it been since USPS says it was handed over in Australia?
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Thanks Dulin's Books. USPS said it had arrived into Foreign Customs on 1/14, that was 11 days after it left the USA??? Then nothing happened! When I contacted USPS they said it was an Aust. Post/Foreign Customs problem! So..I checked with Aust. Post to ask what the hold up was. They blamed Customs, and it just snowballed from there, each seemed to blame one another. I think I lost it when Aust. Post advised they had thoroughly checked and there was no record of any parcel logged with that tracking number. Thanks for your thoughts though,
Quote:
Originally Posted by hiaig
Best case scenario: inaccurate tracking
Worst case scenario: someone at Australia Post is reading on your IQ
Either case, you should be protected.
I know the feeling of eagerly waiting for a new toy and not have it shows up when it is supposed to.
Keep us posted.
Cheers
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Thanks hiaig. Aust. Post offered the info "perhaps it had been scanned incorrectly."
Thank goodness is didn't turn out to be worst case scenario, I actually believed that was the case.....I appreciate your thoughts.
Quote:
Originally Posted by fjtorres
If you ordered via Credit Card you can dispute the charge as "non-delivered" so the onus falls on the shipper and their insurance.
Still, how long's it been?
Package tracking across borders is iffy at best through the postal systems. (One of the reasons the multinational package outfits are so useful...and profitable.)
It might still be wending its way to you.
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Thanks fjtorres. I had paid by PayPal. I thought that it may be covered by PayPal's guarantee.
As it turned out, wonders of all wonders, my international package was delivered by 2 guys dressed in beach wear, driving an early model little brown Datsun sedan. One opened the trunk and out came my USPS package.
Don't care though, it could have arrived by stork, at least
IT'S HERE.